Author/Authors :
Shih، Victor نويسنده , , Shan، Wei نويسنده , , Liu، Mingxing نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Can one man dominate the Chinese Communist Party? This
has been a much debated issue in the field of Chinese politics. Using a novel
database that tracks the biographies of all Central Committee (CC) members
from 1921 to 2007, we derive a measure of top CCP leaders’ factional
strength in the CC. We show that Mao could not maintain a commanding
presence in the Party elite after the Eighth Party Congress in 1956, although
the Party chairman enjoyed a prolonged period of consolidated support in
the CC at a time when the CCP faced grave external threats. No Chinese leader,
not even Mao himself, could regain the level of influence that he had
enjoyed in the late 1940s. Our results, however, do not suggest that a
“code of civility” has developed among Chinese leaders. The Cultural
Revolution saw the destruction of Liu Shaoqi’s faction. Although violent
purges ended after the Cultural Revolution, Chinese leaders continued to
promote followers into the CC and to remove rivals’ followers.